The exhibition is devided in four chronological sections, charting the development of the Aesthetic Movement in art and design: “The search for new beauty 1860s,” “Art for Art’s Sake 1870s-1880s,” “Beautiful people and Aesthetic houses 1870s-1880s” and “Late-flowering beauty 1880s-1890s.” As well as paintings, prints and drawings, the show includes over 250 examples of all the ‘artistic’ decorative arts, together with designs and photographs, portraits, fashionable dress and jewellery, created by star artists of the movement such as Oscar Wilde, James McNeill Whistler, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Edward Burne-Jones, Frederic Leighton, and William Morris. Another thing worth seeing is the V&A’s gorgeous exhibition design with peacock and flower motifs and beautiful classic typefaces on the walls of the exhibition rooms, in perfect harmony with the collection.

Victorian era was the period when British people enjoyed prosperity from industrial revolution and the height of British Empire. It was also the golden age of the British art, which became available to emerging middle class, not only for aristocracy. Inspired by Avant-garde in Paris with the desire to escape the ugliness and materialism of the age, Aestheticism pursued the new kind of art , freed from outworn cultural ideas and moral codes. The movement believed in ‘Art for Art’s Sake’ – art had to just look beautiful. Painters like Rossetti and Whistler used models who were not necessarily beautiful or at odds with Victorial ideals of reserved femininity, and created new and unconventional types of female beauty. The exotic design of furniture and decorative arts influenced by ancient Greek, China and Japan are often considered too much, but introducing design into everyday life with the concept that “people should live beautiful life” was the pioneer of modern design, and we owe them for that. All the collection doesn’t make much sense in the 21st century, but I understand why people of that time were so excited by the Aesthetic movement which brought them a completely new values in art and design.